Power Analysis* -- Trainer-Training

Agenda

1.Why do a Power Analysis? – 15 mins

2.Examples of how Power Analysis can be used – 15 mins

3.Introduction to the Power Grid – 5 mins

4.Eight Steps to do a Power Analysis – 60 min

5.Tips and Techniques – 15 mins

6.Evaluation – 5 mins

1 Why do a Power Analysis?

Power is a pretty vague thing, right? We can’t touch it, or measure it in ounces. But we need to know how to measure it. Why is this important?

 To know what initiatives are achievable and what’s beyond our reach  To evaluate whether we’ve achieved our goals  To measure our growth in power – to see if what we are doing is working  To communicate our power – for recruitment, for opponents, for potential allies

The good people at Agenda/SCOPE in Los Angeles, working with the Grassroots Policy Project, have come up with an excellent tool called power mapping.

 an interactive, accessible way a group can do its own power mapping, relying on the smarts and knowledge in the room  can be applied to just about any community, state or nation – or campaign, specific issue  brings to the forefront important considerations and stimulates insights for initiative planning  helps people see the connections between what we’re working on for today and longer-term power shifts.

Review assumptions and goals on pg 3. Any questions?

The Power Grid

Turn to Power Analysis grid pg10.

 Vertical axis – Amount of power This is the relative amount of power that a person or group has determining which of these agendas will win. The more power a group has, the higher we place them on the grid.

 Horizontal axis– Amount of commitment to and focus on the agendas The right left access represents there the positions, beliefs for actions of a group or individual are with respect to the two competing agendas.

 Our agenda in the upper left, the status quo or opposing agenda in the upper right What we and they are trying to accomplish

 Colors and Geometric Shapes – represent the different types of groups and individuals that are part of the power struggle including decision makers, allies, opponents and unorganized constituents.

2 Reassure people that this will become rapidly clear when we start placing pieces

3 Assumptions of Power Analysis

 Power relationships are unequal right now and this is a key source of the problems and conditions we face.

 There is an agenda at work causing these problems and power is being exercised behind it. We have to develop strategies that address these realities.

 A systemic way of understanding power and how it is exercised is necessary for achieving long-term progressive social change.

Goals of Power Analysis 1.Produce a roughly accurate picture of current power relations for a given community and a given struggle.

2.Develop a shared understanding and language of what power is, the nature of our power and that of the opposing forces, and how our work can influence decision makers and change power relations.

3.Identify the most promising constituencies and partners on which to focus our limited resources for direct engagement and relationship-building.

4.To develop effective strategies for permanently altering relations of power through initiatives that both build power and win social change.

4 5.Use collaborative, popular education methods to demonstrate that together we have the experience and smarts to do an accurate assessment.

5 How to do a Power Analysis.

Step 1: Define the issue to be analyzed.

Step 2: Define our vision/agenda and the status quo/opposing agenda.

Step 3: Plot the major policy, systemic or environmental changes that need to occur to move us toward our vision.

Step 4: Plot the decision makers/power centers.

Step 5: Plot our organization and allied stakeholders/supporters.

Step 6: Plot stakeholders who may be adversely affected or that may resist change.

Step 7: Plot unorganized constituencies.

Step 8: Analyze picture and refine strategy

6 Step by Step Power Analysis

Step 1. Define the conditions, struggle or issue impacting your constituency. – 2 mins This can be a community, a campaign or a constituency.

Our Vision/Agenda

Step 2. Define Our Agenda and the Opposing Agenda/Status Quo – 5 mins

What are some of the key points of our organizational or coalitions agenda, with respect to the problem we just identified? What are some of the key points of the opposing agenda?

For example, Our agenda on health care is quality, affordable, accessible health care for all (paste it in the upper left corner) and that the opposition’s agenda is keep things the same (status quo) OR freedom for companies to earn as much as they want from health care PSE Changes

Step 3: Plot the major Policy, System, or Environmental Changes Required to Achieve our Agenda

What are the component elements of change that we want implemented? This should include any policy, system or environmental changes we want to see in government or organizations or specific initiatives we want to launch.

Decisi Step 4. Plot Major decision-makers – 15 mins on maker s Who are the individuals or entities that have the power to make decisions about our issue? These are the decision makers.

For example: The people who can make the decisions that determine the success of implementing our vision for addressing substance abuse might include state, county and local officials who can direct funding toward or away from appropriate services as well as the executives and board members of health systems, social

7 service agencies and law enforcement agencies who could modify their operating procedures in order to move the overall community closer to our vision.

(Notes – Decision making bodies can be plotted as a whole or by individual. It is important not to confuse Decision makers with Opponents. The city council is a decision making body. A small business council that heavily influences the city council is an opponent.

Now let’s place them – first how much power does each have? And then how much are they with us? Make sure people get it and that more and more voice their opinions as the exercise continues Allow some back and forth – but precision is not the goal – it’s easy to arrive at an “average” position if 2 people don’t agree.

Allies or Supporting Step 5. Plot Allies and Supporters– 15 mins Groups

Who are the organized groups, who are actively working on our agenda or could be working on our agenda?

Discuss together where to plot groups. Urge realism. We often overestimate our own power and this can lead to flawed strategies.

Additional questions you can ask to flesh out where to place the group include: Is this an organization that has the capacity to achieve their goals?

Groups Resistant to Step 6. Plot Organizations That May Resist Our AgendaOur – 10 Agenda mins

Who are the organized groups out there actively working in support of the status quo and/or using their power against our Agenda? These groups might, through their normal way of operating, perpetuate the current situation or make change toward our agenda harder. These are not individuals, not unorganized – these are groups with names. Is this a group that affects the decision-makers in a way that is substantive and relevant to us?

For example: Health systems who are invested in the status quo, social service agencies that aren’t responding appropriately to our issue, etc.

Unorganized Step 7. Plot unorganized constituencies – 10-15 minsConstituencies

8 What kinds of people are most impacted by this issue who are not yet organized into groups?

Examples: uninsured people; low-income people; families with children; small businesses

Caution – people will tend to place them further to the left than they are. Many individuals in these groups may lean toward us, but without an organized voice, there is no way for them to exert any power on the issue or communicate a position on the issue. By definition, they must remain in the neutral center of the grid at zero power – unless we build them into organized allies over time.

Step 8. Analysis and Application -- 15 mins

Now that we’ve placed most of the pieces, and we see how much power people and groups have in relation to each other, do we want to make any changes in where we placed? There are usually a few insights – “x is really not as powerful as we thought, now that we have the rest up there”

This isn’t a campaign plan – it’s a lay of the land that informs initiative planning. Like a brainstorm.

What observations do people have about our power map? What are the strengths and challenges of the current position of our organization and allies? Open-ended question. Lots of possible answers. Allies We are weak and divided Opponents They are strong and united Decision-makers Need more on our side

What does it tell us about where we need to put the most energy? What opportunities for organizing (recruiting, developing leadership and expanding our power) does this picture show us? Choosing carefully among allies and working closely and more intentionally with fewer Choosing carefully among unorganized constituencies and focusing a lot of energy to recruit them or make them into organized groups

Which decision-makers should we focus on weakening?

Which allies are essential partners? Should we ever do anything to weaken them?

9 Examples of things not to do – don’t publicly trash people on our side – talk to them privately, learn why they aren’t as solid as we want them to be, help create conditions for them to take more risks

Which unorganized constituencies should we focus on to develop into allies? How?

What happens to this picture when we implement an effective initiative? Everyone who is involved in the effort shifts – up and to the left. Those who aren’t involved stay the same or go down and to the right. Show examples.

How do these findings impact our plan? Who needs to be involved? How will those decisions be made?

10 Tips for Doing a Great Power Analysis

Clear Goals:  Be clear about the goals for the session (is it a session on how to do a power analysis? Is it a working session to develop an analysis for a campaign?)  Given the goals, who needs to participate?

Prep:  Get all materials together in advance, with a board large enough for all to see, circles of tape that can be easily moved, names or acronyms of the most important players written in advance on the appropriate pieces. Recruit a volunteer to help writing on pieces and rolling tape  You can arrive with a drawn blank matrix or draw one as you explain it  Think of examples of already developed power analysis to use as examples in the session.  Decide whether or not you will have a discussion about “our Agenda/their Agenda” – it’s time consuming but worth it if you can do it  Make sure there are enough people in the room – at least 5, no more than 35  Choose the best methods for engaging participants with the time you have; small groups vs. working with the group as a whole; groups working on different issues or the same issue; or small groups working on different parts of the chart eg: allies, opponents.  Time it out

Power:  Take extra time on the first decision-maker and opponent so that people are clear what power means – the demonstrated ability to advance an agenda.

Players:  Do the most important players in each category first, then ask for suggestions for others, in order to make sure you don’t miss important ones.

Our Power:  To help set an atmosphere of honesty, for the first allied group call on someone you know will give an accurate description of their power. Then ask people in the room to assess their organization’s power, and call on important ones if they’re not volunteering.  Model gentle inquiry to identify good examples of power or to question assertions – “do you know how many people on your email list will actually come to an event?” Allow participants to question but not attack each other.

Watch Unorganized Constituencies:  Don’t let them get placed further left than Inclined – they are unorganized and therefore unable to exert power or have a united position on the topic. They should be clustered around the center line. 11 Watch the clock:  Make sure you save at least 15 minutes for discussion before people start to leave. Stick to your timing – more players can be added another time, this is meant to be updated.

Be collaborative:  Don’t let one person become the “authority” – everyone has information and experience, and when averaged together we can arrive at a close enough placement.

Trust your judgement:  Look for opportunities to puncture myths, probe for missing pieces. Asking the questions will almost always produce the insights without you having to deliver it.

12 Our Agenda Power Analysis Grid Opposing Agenda

10 10 Decisive Decisive decision decision making making power or power or influence influence 8 8 Active Active Participant Participant in Decision in Decision Making Making

6 6 Power to Power to have have major major influence on influence on decision decision making making 4 4 Taken into Taken into account account

2 2 Can get Can get attention attention

0 0 Not on Not on

13 Radar Radar Screen Screen

Die Active Inclined Inclined Active Die Hard Support towards towards Support Hard

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